SLAVS AND GERMANICS ARE DIFFERENT ‘GENERATIONS’ You can conflate Corded ware (Po

SLAVS AND GERMANICS ARE DIFFERENT ‘GENERATIONS’

You can conflate Corded ware (Polish-Ukrainian territory), with celto-italic-germanic, which is true.

BUT while polish people speak a slavic language, slavs, (slavonic speakers), are (a) a much younger people, with no history and possibly only a proto-language prior to 700.

So while it may be possible to say that we all share black-sea ancestors, it is false to say they were slavs. The population-radiation is out of poland, for the simple reason that it’s the best farmland other than france. And the genome spreads from Poland on the north sea, well into western ukraine.

It is more correct to say that today’s slavs are the youngest and most ‘recent’ white people to evolve, and possibly that they are purest genetic europeans.

What you can’t say is that there is any relationship between the term Slav and any of the successes in the west. There isn’t *any* justification for that.

So use ‘early europeans’ as our common ancestors and you’re ok.

The general evidence is that the people who spoke germanic languages around the north sea evolved physical traits superior to all other european tribes in the modern world, largely through self-domestication. The corded ware culture probably created the waves of european excellence in the ancient world.

More by Simon Ström:

“Corded Ware” is probably too narrow, i.e., accounts only for one out of two important subsets of the sum total of the post 3,000 BC westward Yamnaya movements which together produced a “proto-white” core population.

The other major population being related rather to the Bell Beaker phenomenon, dominated by R1b Steppe clans migrating via the Sub-carpathian/Pannonian route as opposed to the territory of Poland and Ukraine which is associated with early Corded Ware).

Subsets of the Bell Beaker subsequently departed to colonize the British Isles and Scandinavia without significant admixture with the previous inhabitants. (Displacement).


Source date (UTC): 2017-08-15 10:55:00 UTC

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